Rhythmanalysis in doris lessing's "storms": London from a critical view of everyday life
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Date
2020
Authors
Üstündağ Güvenç, Özge
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Abstract
The interaction between humans and space has recently been one of the dominant issues in the works of the contemporary century to explain how thinking about space as a fixed and limiting framework has evolved to an alternative multidimensional understanding of it where human interventions create alternative space. This study aims not only to move beyond the setting descriptions in a literary text but also to open up Henri Lefebvre’s theory of space, particularly his notion of rhythmanalysis, that have been utilized in the fields of architecture, sociology, geography, urban and regional planning to include literature as well. To this end, Doris Lessing’s sketch, “Storms” from the collection London Observed: Stories and Sketches, will be analysed since it displays various life trajectories in London and provides a critical view of the city from two different perspectives –that of the taxi driver and of the narrator –which contradict each other. Focusing on their interpretations of London and to what extent they are able to sense and make meaning of rhythms, thus, offers a new mode of observing the movement and continuity of life in the city, which also displays the relationship between humans and the spaces they occupy, and what feelings they attribute to.
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Henri Lefebvre, Rhythmanalysis, Rhythms, Doris Lessing, Storms, Space
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Citation
Üstündağ Güvenç, Özge (2020). "Rhythmanalysis in doris lessing's "storms": London from a critical view of everyday life", Journal of Narrative and Language Studies, Vol. 8, No. 14, pp. 25-39.
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Source
Journal of Narrative and Language Studies
Volume
8
Issue
14
Start Page
25
End Page
39